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Main Street

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Main Street

By: Sinclair Lewis
Narrated by: Barbara Caruso
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About this listen

Widely hailed as a milestone in American literature, Sinclair Lewis' Main Street vividly describes a country on the verge of massive change, with traditional values being threatened by progress. The novel's heroine, Carol Milford, is a highly educated, ambitious woman who plans to join a newly enlightened society. But after marrying a small-town doctor, she finds herself trapped in the role of a dutiful wife. Carol's desires for social change conflict with the security of her comfortable married life, as she struggles to understand the cost of conformity...and rebellion. As relevant today as it was upon its 1920 publication, Main Street is both a masterful piece of writing and a fascinating microcosm of America's social evolution.Public Domain (P)1996 Recorded Books Classics Genre Fiction Literary Fiction United States World Literature Fiction

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Critic reviews

"A most searching and excellent piece of work; a feather in the cap of literature." (John Galsworthy)
All stars
Most relevant  
Yes, small town US had and has issues, but some more nuance and empathy would increase the experience of listening

Bitter Sarcastic Long

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Magnificent story and very sound narration - really brings story and character alive. Thoroughly recommended listen!!

Is THE American novel ?

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Written in the 3rd person and almost entirely concerned with our ‘heroines’ perspective (despite the good hearted tempering from her husbands voice along the way), on small town mores in middle America one hundred years ago; at about 2/3 of the way through, a sudden flurry of other characters are given voice, and in this way we seem to cut to the chase as it were.
Here the novel takes on the character of an essay, a polemic, a meditation and at some point even a rant.
There is an attempt at balance and some genuine reflection on the better aspects of small town life and the values, aspirations and actions of its denizens. Nonetheless, in the context of the novel we have already been thoroughly softened up for the authors view of that life as stifling, hypocritical, unimaginative and ultimately empty.
Though well written, and no doubt with as much relevance today as at the time of publication, its calls for those missing attributes to be identified as valuable and even necessary for many a human soul’s survival seem almost quaint in light of politics in present day America. Though the line between the two is clear.
It is at that 2/3 point when it reads most like an essay that the book is at its most effective. Released from the strictures of narrative, plot and character, the author makes a strong case for his own argument and associated challenges to the country. I understand the book to be considered a classic of American satire, but I fear its claws may be too clipped and its passion too polite for it to make any marks on today’s readership.
I listened to an audiobook read by Barbara Caruso, who was absolutely brilliant. I was particularly taken with the voice she gave to ‘the husband’, whose natural equanimity and gentlemanly manner came across so well, even as the author pours some acorn on many of the characters surface values.
I enjoy a cultural exploration of tribal specifics, and this is a fine example, but unlike Austen and Wharton et al, it is beginning to creak like an old lady.

Creaky satire on small town USA

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